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Peter Senge referred to "systems citizenship" as the leadership mandate for this millennium. So how can we all be better systems citizens?
In this episode we ask real systems citizens (practitioners and educators) at Royal Roads University in Canada how studying complexity helps them understand the world and solve real world problems.
What is complexity's "definable, deliverable gift to the world? How can we use it to influence and make impact, and even grow ourselves as people?
By Angie Cross & Haley Campbell-Gross
Peter Senge referred to "systems citizenship" as the leadership mandate for this millennium. So how can we all be better systems citizens?
In this episode we ask real systems citizens (practitioners and educators) at Royal Roads University in Canada how studying complexity helps them understand the world and solve real world problems.
What is complexity's "definable, deliverable gift to the world? How can we use it to influence and make impact, and even grow ourselves as people?